Internet privacy rights : rights to protect autonomy / Paul Bernal.
Material type: TextSeries: Cambridge intellectual property and information law ; 24.Publisher: Cambridge [UK] : Cambridge University Press, 2014Description: 1 online resource (328 pages)Content type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781139871037
- 113987103X
- 9781139865296
- 1139865293
- 9781107337428
- 1107337429
- 1306684080
- 9781306684088
- 9781107628502
- 1107628504
- 1139699172
- 9781139699174
- 1139862227
- 9781139862226
- 1139861034
- 9781139861038
- 1139868888
- 9781139868884
- 1139863177
- 9781139863179
- Data protection -- Law and legislation
- Computer security -- Law and legislation
- Internet -- Security measures
- Internet -- Safety measures
- Privacy, Right of
- Internet -- Sécurité -- Mesures
- POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Political Freedom & Security -- Civil Rights
- POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Political Freedom & Security -- Human Rights
- Computer security -- Law and legislation
- Data protection -- Law and legislation
- Internet -- Safety measures
- Internet -- Security measures
- Privacy, Right of
- 323.44/8 323.448 23
- K3264.C65 B49 2014eb
- LAW050000
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Electronic-Books | OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | E-Books EBSCO | Available |
Print version record.
2.4 The Cybercrime Convention and the Computer Misuse Act.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Cover; Half-title; Series; Title; Copyright; Contents; Preface and acknowledgements; 1 Internet privacy rights; 1 Introduction; 1.1 The internet in contemporary life; 1.2 Data and the internet; 1.3 Underlying questions and a paradigm shift; 1.4 Autonomy as the prime concern; 1.5 Privacy per se?; 1.6 Symbiotic regulation and the Symbiotic Web; 2 Privacy and autonomy on the internet; 2.1 Threats to autonomy on the internet; 2.2 Competing interests: individuals, governments, businesses; 2.3 Privacy as a protection for autonomy; 3 Internet privacy rights.
3.1 A right to roam the internet with privacy3.2 A right to monitor those who monitor us; 3.3 A right to delete personal data; 3.4 A right to an online identity; 4 The impact of internet privacy rights; 4.1 The impact on individuals; 4.2 The impact on governments; 4.3 The impact on businesses; 5 A privacy-friendly future?; 2 Privacy, autonomy and the internet; 1 Autonomy; 1.1 A broad definition of autonomy; 1.2 Legal philosophy; 1.3 Historical, natural rights and positivist perspectives; 1.4 Limitations to autonomy; 2 Privacy; 2.1 The challenge of capturing the character of privacy.
2.2 Privacy as a fundamental or an instrumental right2.3 Informational privacy and internet privacy; 2.4 Privacy and control; 2.5 How the internet has challenged privacy; 3 Autonomy and consent; 3.1 The complexity of consent on the internet; 3.2 The power of the default -- and opt-in or opt-out; 3.3 Is consent a red herring?; 3.4 Collaborative consent: consent as a process and a dialogue; 4 Autonomy, privacy, challenges and criticisms; 4.1 The security challenge; 4.2 The economic challenge; 4.3 The communitarian critique; 4.4 Feminist critiques; 4.5 Transparency critiques and challenges.
5 Privacy is not the enemy3 The Symbiotic Web; 1 The Symbiotic Web; 1.1 What is the Symbiotic Web?; 1.2 The evolution of the Symbiotic Web; 1.3 The emergence of the Symbiotic Web; 2 The make-up of the benign symbiosis; 2.1 Search engines; 2.2 Communications providers; 2.3 Social networking services; 2.4 Internet Service Providers; 2.5 Commercial websites; 2.6 The majority of the web?; 3 The risks of a malign symbiosis; 3.1 Who is serving whom? Alliances and favouritism; 3.2 Tailoring and Balkanisation; 3.3 Risks associated with particular data types; 3.4 The burgeoning market in data.
4 Governments and the Symbiotic Web4.1 Tensions and balance; 4.2 Harnessing the Symbiotic Web; 5 Managing the symbiosis; 5.1 Symbiotic regulation for the Symbiotic Web; 5.2 New business models; 4 Law, privacy and the internet -- the landscape; 1 The role of law in the internet; 1.1 Cyberlibertarians and cyberpaternalists; 1.2 Network communitarians: the active community; 1.3 Law, privacy and autonomy -- and the role of rights; 2 Privacy-protective law; 2.1 Data protection and the Data Protection Directive; 2.2 Implementation and reform; 2.3 The E-Privacy Directive and the 'Cookies Directive'
What rights to privacy do we have on the internet, and how can we make them real?
English.
eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - Worldwide
There are no comments on this title.